Here's the first and easiest idea to consider: Book any long-term capital gains right now, before 2008 ends.
Here's why: While the IRS taxes long-term capital gains at a relatively low 15% rate, Obama proposes raising this rate to 20% for individual taxpayers making more than $200,000 a year and for families making more than $250,000.
While a 5% rate increase may seem modest, long-term capital gains are often substantial. Long-term capital gains regularly break into seven figures if the gains stem from decades of appreciation in a real estate investment or from decades spent building up a successful business.
Note: The fifteen-percent preferential capital gain rates were originally set to expire in 2010, so capital gains rates were always at risk of sneaking back up.
Delay Capital Losses Until Later
A quick related point: Because capital gains and losses offset each other, you might decide to delay recognizing any capital losses until the point capital gains tax rates rise.
The savings calculations related to this technique are tricky. But delaying a capital loss a few weeks could in many cases save you several thousand dollars because the loss will be applied, or netted against, either capital gains or ordinary income that would otherwise be taxed on a higher rate.
Extract Earnings and Profits Now
If you own a C corporation or former C corporation, you should be aware of a potential tax time bomb that may exist inside your corporation: previously taxed profits retained inside the corporation.
Here's the problem: Right now, if the corporation pays out these earnings and profits to shareholders as dividends, the shareholders pay a modest 15% qualified dividends tax on the dividends. And that's pretty good.
However, this qualified dividends tax rate expires at the end of 2010. And after that, dividends paid from C corporation earnings and profits will get taxed at the shareholder's top marginal rate. That top rate may be close to or even exceed 40%.
You see the savings, right? Paying, say, a 40% tax rate instead of a 15% tax rate will have a huge effect.
Accordingly, as much as is possible, withdraw previously taxed C corporation profits now, before the low dividend tax rate expires or before tax law changes close this corporate tax loophole.
And a special note for any S corporations that used to operate as C corporations. If you retained some of your C corporation profits during the years you operated as a C corporation, talk with your CPA about this issue, too. You've got the same tax time bond ticking inside your books.
Reconsider the Roth Option
One powerful long-term tax planning technique is worth mentioning for high net worth business owners. If you're someone with more than adequate retirement savings, you may want to setup and use a 401(k) plan to make Roth contributions.
Here's the logic. Typically, high income tax payers can't contribute money to a Roth-IRA account because the Roth-IRA cutoff point is $160,000. Rise above that income level and you lose your Roth eligibility.
However, no income cutoff exists for Roth-401(k) plans. And this opportunity creates a long-term tax saving opportunity for business people who've accumulated substantial assets.
Say you've a fifty-year-old who's got a sizable taxable investment account. In this case, almost without effort, you could transfer $40,000 a year from your taxable investment account to a couple of Roth-401(k) nontaxable accounts for you and your spouse.
In this case, you end up with a million dollars in your Roth-401(k) at the point you retire. You won't have saved any tax (yet) with the 401(k). But the money you've accumulated and the investment earnings on the money won't be taxed. Not ever.
This is big. During your retirement years, having this $1,000,000 of Roth wealth could save you $30,000 to $40,000 a year in income taxes.
And if you've got kids or grandchildren, this tax planning trick gets even better: Your kids can (with a little bit of clever upfront planning) continue to save the $30,000 to $40,000 a year over their lifetimes.
Small Business Tax Planning
There are many reasons that make an estate plan very important. When you are unable to take decisions regarding your healthcare due to illness or accident there needs to be someone who can legally take such decisions on your behalf. Alternatively, if you require long-term care, which is not covered by medical insurance, you have to make alternative arrangements beforehand. There may be many responsibilities that would need to be performed in case of your incapacity or death. Your estate plan can cover all arrangements in case of the above-mentioned eventualities. To find out how it can do this, read on.
a) Planning for incapacity:- It is important to have arrangements that can ensure that you are taken care of in the event of your incapacity. To do this
. Make a living will:- This legal instrument documents your intentions about using life-sustaining measures when you are in a state of terminal illness. It expressly states your wish in this regard and acts as a bar for anyone to speak on your behalf.
. Prepare a health care power of attorney:- This document is to authorize a specific person to decide upon your healthcare measures when you fall in an unconscious or vegetative state or are unable to take your own health care decisions on account of any other reason(s). Laws in all states are not uniform on this issue but many state laws can permit you to include instructions about continuing or withholding life-sustaining care in this document.
. Buy Insurance for long-term care:- As things presently stand, health insurance does not cover the cost of long-term care. As such, in case when such care becomes necessary it is your spouse or other family members who have to foot the bill. The remedy is to take out a long-term insurance policy.
. Form a revocable living trust:- A revocable living trust will enable you to appoint a trustee who can succeed you in order to manage the trust when you cannot do this due to injury or illness/death and avoid any probate court guardianship issues.
. Create a durable power of attorney:- This a legal document that lets you appoint an 'attorney-in-fact' or 'agent' who can perform various responsibilities on your behalf. There are many responsibilities involving banking transactions, safety deposit boxes, insurance claim settlements, filing of tax returns, matters related to government benefits, purchase, sale and management of real estate etc. that have legal implications. The durable power of attorney will vest your agent with authority to carry out all the work on your behalf, legally.
b) Avoiding probate:- You can avoid you heirs going through harrowing probate proceedings, which are also very costly and can consume a big part of your estate in legal costs and fees. 'Transfer on death accounts' avoid probate proceedings letting you maintain sole ownership of assets as long as you are alive. Designate beneficiaries for annuities, individual retirement accounts, life insurance, and retirement plans. Note that these designations have precedence over other claims arising out of trusts, wills etc. Revocable living trusts also help avoiding probates as your trustee takes charge to manage/distribute your property in accordance to your wishes in the event of your death or incapacity. Titling your assets as 'joint ownership with rights of survivorship' can also avoid probate.
c) Forming charitable trusts or making gifts to charity:- Depending on your goals, you can make gifts of IRAs, retirement plans, annuities, make charity a beneficiary to life insurance benefits or establish a charitable trust(s). There are ways through which you can avoid estate tax, capital gains tax, get a reduction on income tax payable etc. along with receiving lifetime income from assets that are to be distributed to charity after your death.
d) Avoiding estate tax burden:- Form other trusts to eliminate/mitigate estate tax payable by your heirs:- You can form bypass trusts, A/B trusts or other types of trusts to ensure that your heirs are not burdened by avoidable estate taxes. Your estate tax consultant will be able to guide you how to go about this.
Both Stephen Nelson & Kris Koonar are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Stephen Nelson has sinced written about articles on various topics from Finances, Setting Up Company and Tax Deductions. Steve Nelson is an accountant and tax professor, the author of MBA's Guide to Microsoft Excel, and the editor of the and. Stephen Nelson's top article generates over 90500 views. to your Favourites.
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